Login / Signup

Frequent blood feeding enables insecticide-treated nets to reduce transmission by mosquitoes that bite predominately outdoors.

Tanya L RussellNigel W BeebeHugo BugoroAllan ApairamoWeng K ChowRobert D CooperFrank H CollinsNeil F LoboThomas R Burkot
Published in: Malaria journal (2016)
The short duration of the feeding cycle by this species offers an explanation for the substantial control of malaria that has been achieved in the Solomon Islands by LLINs and IRS. Anopheles farauti is primarily exophagic and early biting, with 13% of mosquitoes entering houses to feed late at night during each feeding cycle. The two-day feeding cycle of An. farauti requires females to take 5-6 blood meals before the extrinsic incubation period (EIP) is completed; and this could translate into substantial population-level mortality by LLINs or IRS before females would be infectious to humans with Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax. Although An. farauti is primarily exophagic, the indoor vector control tools recommended by the World Health Organization (LLINs and IRS) can still provide an important level of control. Nonetheless, elimination will likely require vector control tools that target other bionomic vulnerabilities to suppress transmission outdoors and that complement the control provided by LLINs and IRS.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • aedes aegypti
  • coronary artery disease
  • air pollution
  • risk factors
  • cardiovascular events
  • health risk
  • drinking water